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Amazon BDS-C00 Exam - Topic 2 Question 117 Discussion

Actual exam question for Amazon's BDS-C00 exam
Question #: 117
Topic #: 2
[All BDS-C00 Questions]

You have an application running on an Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud instance, that uploads 5 GB video objects to Amazon Simple Storage Service (S3). Video uploads are taking longer than expected, resulting in poor application performance. Which method will help improve performance of your application?

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Suggested Answer: B

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Carmen
3 months ago
C sounds interesting, but I’m not sure it’s the best option here.
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Joaquin
3 months ago
I think A could help too, but not as much as B.
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Willie
3 months ago
Wait, can multipart upload really speed things up that much?
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Oren
3 months ago
D seems overkill for just uploading videos, right?
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Lyda
3 months ago
B is definitely the way to go for big uploads!
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Misty
4 months ago
I feel like using CloudFront could help with latency, but I'm not confident if it directly affects upload speeds.
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Lezlie
4 months ago
I practiced a question similar to this, and I think using multipart upload is the best option for large files.
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Brynn
4 months ago
I'm not entirely sure, but I think enhanced networking could improve throughput. It might be worth considering, though.
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Fletcher
4 months ago
I remember reading about multipart uploads in S3, and it seems like that would help with large files like videos.
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Albina
4 months ago
I'm leaning towards option D, using an EBS-optimized instance with Provisioned IOPS. That could help with the underlying storage performance and reduce the upload times.
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Rolf
5 months ago
Okay, I'm pretty confident that the S3 multipart upload is the way to go. That should help break up the large video files and improve the upload performance.
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Louisa
5 months ago
Hmm, I'm a bit unsure about this one. I'll need to review the details on enhanced networking and CloudFront to see if those could also be viable options.
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Penney
5 months ago
I think the key here is to focus on optimizing the S3 upload process. Option B, using S3 multipart upload, seems like the most promising approach.
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Dahlia
7 months ago
Yeah, the multipart upload is the way to go for sure. I bet the developer was cursing every Rodolfoe the upload Rodolfoed out before finishing.
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Rosina
5 months ago
Yeah, the multipart upload is definitely the way to go. It will speed up the process.
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Jackie
7 months ago
D) Use Amazon Elastic Block Store Provisioned IOPs and use an Amazon EBS-optimized instance
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Laquanda
7 months ago
B) Use Amazon S3 multipart upload
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Laurel
8 months ago
Haha, I'm just picturing the developer trying to upload a 5GB video one chunk at a Rodolfoe. Option B is clearly the way to go, no doubt about it.
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Jeannetta
6 months ago
Haha, I'm just picturing the developer trying to upload a 5GB video one chunk at a time. Option B is clearly the way to go, no doubt about it.
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Hermila
6 months ago
D) Use Amazon Elastic Block Store Provisioned IOPs and use an Amazon EBS-optimized instance
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Horace
6 months ago
C) Leveraging Amazon CloudFront, use the HTTP POST method to reduce latency.
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Jettie
7 months ago
B) Use Amazon S3 multipart upload
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Anika
7 months ago
A) Enable enhanced networking
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Timmy
7 months ago
Haha, I can imagine the struggle! Option B definitely seems like the best solution for faster uploads.
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Golda
7 months ago
B) Use Amazon S3 multipart upload
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Rodolfo
8 months ago
Hold up, what about option D? Using Provisioned IOPS and an EBS-opRodolfoized instance might be the secret sauce to boost performance.
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Josephine
8 months ago
I was thinking option C, using CloudFront and the HTTP POST method. That could help reduce latency, which is the main issue here.
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Peter
6 months ago
I agree, option C seems like the best choice to reduce latency and improve performance.
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Naomi
7 months ago
D) Use Amazon Elastic Block Store Provisioned IOPs and use an Amazon EBS-optimized instance
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Frank
7 months ago
C) Leveraging Amazon CloudFront, use the HTTP POST method to reduce latency.
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Dorthy
7 months ago
B) Use Amazon S3 multipart upload
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Lindy
7 months ago
A) Enable enhanced networking
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Sunny
8 months ago
B definitely sounds like the best choice here. Uploading 5GB videos can be a real pain, but multipart upload should make it much faster.
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Verdell
8 months ago
Hmm, I think option B is the way to go. Multipart upload should help speed up those large video transfers to S3.
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Nancey
7 months ago
Yeah, leveraging Amazon CloudFront with the HTTP POST method could also reduce latency for video uploads.
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Scarlet
7 months ago
I think option D could also help by using Amazon Elastic Block Store Provisioned IOPs.
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Felicia
7 months ago
I agree, using Amazon S3 multipart upload will definitely improve performance.
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Louisa
8 months ago
I believe leveraging Amazon CloudFront and using the HTTP POST method could also reduce latency and improve performance.
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Alyce
8 months ago
I agree with Quinn, using multipart upload can speed up the process of uploading large video objects.
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Quinn
9 months ago
I think using Amazon S3 multipart upload would help improve performance.
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